All-Access at the CAA Tournament: HoopsHD is proud of the Pride!

Conference tournaments are about basketball but also so much more: the fans, bands, cheerleaders, etc. The CAA Tournament took place in Washington, DC this week and we could not have been more excited to be there in person! HoopsHD covered all of the angles so we hope you enjoyed our cascade of coverage in the days past. Jon Teitel concludes our series with Tuesday night’s title game:

I am loving the diversity of the pregame meals this week: tonight was make-your-own-tacos!

I thought we might get a larger crowd for the title game between Northeastern and Hofstra (especially since it is a rematch of last year’s title game) but I supposed that it is hard to just pop into DC for the night if you live in New York or Massachusetts. Sadly, 1 of the plenty of good seats available was my own: I assumed my assigned seat remained the same as the 1st 3 rounds, which means I did not read the seating chart and blew my chance to sit courtside: son of a bee-sting! Let’s tip things off:

Exactly 1 minute into the game someone accidentally tore the net on Hofstra’s side of the court, which required a delay while the maintenance guy brought in his stepladder to fix it. Fortunately, he was able to take care of it in just a couple of minutes:

Northeastern got out to a 10-3 lead thanks to a 3 and a layup by SR SG Bolden Brace, forcing Hofstra coach Joe Mihalich to call a quick timeout:

SR PG Desure Buie got Hofstra back into the game with a trio of 1st half threes but Huskies SO SG Shaquille Walters made a pair of pretty fadeaway jump shots including 1 at the end of the half to give his team a 30-28 halftime lead and give the Pride faithful some cause for concern.

The game remained tight throughout the majority of the 2nd half, although Northeastern leading scorer had a shockingly quiet night with 11 PTS on 11 FGs. Coach Mihalich basically played his 5 starters the entire game: 3 played all 40 minutes, 2 played 37 minutes, and the 6 minutes from the subs were inconsequential. However, it seemed to work due to a total team effort: 20 PTS from Buie, 19 from Eli Pemberton, 17 from Jalen Ray, and a career-high 15 REB from JR big man Isaac Kante. Most of the stats between the 2 teams were pretty even, as they both shot exactly 10-25 from beyond the arc(!), but the X-factor was at the FT line: the Huskies only made 1 (1-2 FTM) while the Pride only missed 1 (16-17 FTM). Hofstra used that FT advantage to clinch a 70-61 victory and their 1st trip to the NCAA tourney since 2001, although it was 1 of the most muted celebrations you will ever see with the court staying un-stormed:

A security guard prevented me from taking photos on the court so I just stood behind the Hofstra bench and got the following shots:

Happy band members:

Kante hugging everyone in sight:

Pemberton acknowledging the fans who did show up:

We got hats!

We got t-shirts!

Buie hugging his loved ones:

Kante trying to find a shirt that fits:

Buie sharing the special moment with his daughter Jada:

Still not sure whether she likes being the center of attention:

The Hofstra dance team discussing who will get to travel to the NCAA tourney next week:

The basketball team celebrating on the podium:

Coach Mihalich thanking the fans:

This is probably 1 of the best photos I have ever taken: Ray hoisting the trophy up high (and centered properly!), his teammates reminding everyone that they are the #1 seed, some signage in focus in the background…LOVE IT!

I cannot top that so that’s a wrap, hope you enjoyed it: on to the Madness!

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HoopsHD at the MAAC Tournament – Day 1

Much in the same tradition of our colleague Lee Delvecchio when the event was held in MAACachusetts, HoopsHD has returned to the opening round of the MAAC Tournament, this year being held in Atlantic City’s Boardwalk Hall.  Day 1 is an amazing six-tuple header of games with three women’s Opening Round games to be followed by three Men’s games.  Chad Sherwood was on hand right from the start to cover all (or as many as possible before giving out) of these games.

The day started with an early wake up (especially after staying up to watch the late WCC semifinal and then record a Championship Week Video Notebook podcast last night) and drive to Atlantic City.  I parked at Caesar’s Casino, and had a chance to say hello to the mighty Emperor himself on my way in.

It was then off down the Boardwalk to historic Boardwalk Hall for the first game of the day.

           

The first matchup featured women’s 8 seed Niagara taking on 9 seed Saint Peter’s.  The crowds were sparse for such an early game, but Monte the Purple Eagle was still into it.

       

Niagara came away with the 64-53 victory led by 16 points from Dagny Davidsdottir and 11 from Jai Moore.  Coach Pierce noted in the post-game press conference that her team had a size advantage over the Peacocks, and that playing the 9:30 AM game was not as much of a challenge because they had played in the same time slot last season.

Next up was the 7th seeded women’s Iona Gaels taking on 10th seeded Monmouth.  Iona was the first team of the day to bring their pep band (joined below by their mascot on trumpet!), while Monmouth, the school closest to Atlantic City, did not even bring any cheerleaders.

Monmouth built a nice lead against Iona and held off several attempts at a 4th quarter rally to win 69-60 and advance to a quarterfinal matchup against 2 seed Marist.  Sierra Green led the way with 26 points for the Hawks.  Morgan Rachu scored a double-double for the Gaels in her final game of her career.  She was understandably broken up by the loss, and the sad fact that for all but a very few teams, the season will end with an L.

The third game of the day (and the final women’s game) featured 6 seed Siena taking on 11 seed Canisius.  Despite being only 5-24 overall, Canisius jumped out to an early lead and took a 10 point advantage into halftime.  This was not news that Siena’s mascot was taking very well…

 

Siena cam storming back in the 3rd quarter to take the lead and then surged in the 4th to win by a final score of 58-48.  Rayshel Brown led the way for the Saints with 20 points.

With the women done, it was time to turn attention to the men’s Opening Round games,  By this point I knew that attending 6 games in one day was looking like an impossible task.  However, I was determined to at least get through the matchup between 8 seed Fairfield and 9 seed Manhattan.  Steve Masiello’s Jaspers brought the biggest group of fans to date, with their cheer squad and pep band leading the way to dominate the noise levels in the building (including pullout of a giant poster of a blind ref when a bad call went against the Jaspers).

The game was…well, to put it nicely, a defensive struggle.  The teams were tied at 19 at halftime.  Manhattan started finding the basket in the second half, and opened up a 43-29 lead about halfway through it, eventually winning by a final score of 61-43.  Pauly Paulicap was the standout star for the Jaspers, scoring 18 points and pulling down 12 rebounds.

Four games in a single day proved to be my limit.  The MAAC will be back here each of the next two years, and I am definitely going to give this marathon another try.  For now, you will have to check out our Championship Week Video Notebook later tonight for details on the two late games — #7 Iona vs #10 Canisius and #6 Niagara vs #11 Marist.  Good night for now from the MAAC Tournament and Atlantic City Boardwalk Hall — home of the world’s largest pipe organ!

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Puppet Ramblings: Coronavirus and the NCAA

The coronavirus, which causes Covid-19, has infected a handful of people, and made a few of them very sick, and has made a lot of other people all over the country lose their freakin’ minds.  Perhaps this is all justified.  I have no medical background whatsoever and am certainly not a qualified expert when it comes to viral outbreaks.

What I do know is that we’ve seen Chicago State cancel two regular season games against Seattle and Utah Valley, Kansas City cancel one (also against Seattle), and we’ve now seen the Ivy League decide to cancel its entire conference tournament.  There may be more events either cancelled or altered before this is over, and that could conceivably include the NCAA Tournament.  Just today, Ohio Governor Mike DeWine made a recommendation that all sporting events in his state be closed to fans.  This would include the MAC Tournament, which plays its quarterfinals on Thursday, as well as the First Four games in Dayton and the 1st/2nd Round games in Cleveland which are scheduled for next week.

So…where to begin….

I actually do have a passion for young people, and also feel that I have an attachment to those who play college athletics.  As much as I love college basketball, and as great as the season has been, and as much as I’m looking forward to this year’s NCAA Tournament, I also do not want to have players (who really are just college students playing a game), coaches, and fans in a situation that unnecessarily jeopardizes their health and safety.  I think that everyone at Hoops HD feels the same way.  As much as we love our hoops, we also love it when players, coaches, and fans are safe and healthy.

But here’s my question…

Why aren’t there more experts, and by that I mean doctors, and scientists, and healthcare professionals, taking the lead on this issue??

Not just in regards to March Madness (because as much as we love it, in the grand scheme of things it really isn’t that damned important), but on the issue as a whole??  You turn on the news and you see reporters, and elected officials, and other sorts of people who I do not believe fall into the category of “medical experts” weighing in on this.  Why aren’t the medical experts weighing in more than they are??  We’ve got idiots walking around wearing masks who actually think that by wearing a mask, they won’t get sick.  I’d like a little bit of assurance that the people who are making important decisions aren’t as stupid as the people wearing the masks.  if medical experts are the ones recommending taking actions such as calling in the national guard and setting up a containment zone around New Rochelle (20 miles from Madison Square Garden where both the Big East Tournament and East Regional are scheduled to be played), or calling for events to be closed to the public, or cancelling all face to face classes and sending students home, then we should probably listen to them.  If the people making those decisions are just arbitrarily doing so after they’ve swiped a bunch of masks from a hospital to keep them from getting sick, then we really shouldn’t listen to them at all.

I do know the NCAA has a task force that consists largely of medical experts to advise them on this issue.  They meet twice a day every day to assess the situation.  So far, they’ve said that there is no need to cancel or alter the NCAA Tournament.  That may change, but as of now, it hasn’t.  If medical experts are saying that it is dangerous to proceed with the tournament, then I agree that it should at least be postponed (hopefully not cancelled altogether).  But if they’re not saying that, and they haven’t so far, then I think that it’s okay to play basketball!!

This event is supposed to be fun, and exciting, and special for the players, coaches and fans.  The cloud of the coronavirus, even if it isn’t dangerous, may make it difficult or impossible to provide that atmosphere.  If that’s the case, then I understand delaying.  But as critical as I am toward the NCAA at times, I do believe they are meticulously monitoring this, and that they will make the right decision.  If they say it is safe to proceed, then they are saying so because the medical experts advised them that it was safe.  If they say we shouldn’t play, then I’m confident that they are not making that decision arbitrarily, but that it was an informed decision where actual experts recommended that such an action be taken.

We at Hoops HD will continue to cover Championship Week and the NCAA Tournament the way that we always do.  I’m not sure if we know how to do it any differently.

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Handing out the Hardware: All-conference awards of the year (Part 2 of 2)

CLICK HERE for Jon Teitel’s latest Bracket Projections

CLICK HERE for our Championship Week Video Notebook: Day 7

The end of the regular season means that it is time to recognize the best players/coaches in college basketball this season. HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel has reviewed all of the numbers and is ready to announce his picks for the 5 best players from each conference based on their all-around stats. Players are listed in a traditional 5-position lineup (G-G-F-F-C) whenever possible with several exceptions, plus special awards for each conference’s Player of the Year (POY), Rookie of the Year (ROY), Defensive Player of the Year (DPOY), 6th Man of the Year (6TH), and Coach of the Year (COY). If you think he has overlooked anyone then feel free to tweet us your comments, and if you missed Part 1 last week you can find it at: https://hoopshd.com/2020/03/02/handing-out-the-hardware-all-conference-awards-of-the-year-part-1-of-2-5

AAC
G: Christian Vital (Connecticut)
G: Quinton Rose (Temple)
G: Kendric Davis (SMU)
F: Precious Achiuwa (Memphis)
F: Jayden Gardner (East Carolina)
POY: Jayden Gardner (East Carolina)
ROY: Precious Achiuwa (Memphis)
DPOY: Akok Akok (Connecticut)
6TH: Caleb Mills (Houston)
COY: Frank Haith (Tulsa)

A-10
G: Fatts Russell (Rhode Island)
G: Ryan Daly (St. Joseph’s)
F: Marcus Weathers (Duquesne)
F: Obi Toppin (Dayton)
C: Tre Mitchell (Massachusetts)
POY: Obi Toppin (Dayton)
ROY: Tre Mitchell (Massachusetts)
DPOY: Michael Hughes (Duquesne)
6TH: Javonte Perkins (St. Louis)
COY: Anthony Grant (Dayton)

ACC
G: Tre Jones (Duke)
G: Michael DeVoe (Georgia Tech)
F: Elijah Hughes (Syracuse)
F: Jordan Nwora (Louisville)
C: Vernon Carey Jr. (Duke)
POY: Jordan Nwora (Louisville)
ROY: Vernon Carey Jr. (Duke)
DPOY: James Banks III (Georgia Tech)
6TH: Dane Goodwin (Notre Dame)
COY: Chris Mack (Louisville)

Big 12
G: Devon Dotson (Kansas)
G: Desmond Bane (TCU)
F: Kristian Doolittle (Oklahoma)
F: Brady Manek (Oklahoma)
C: Udoka Azubuike (Kansas)
POY: Devon Dotson (Kansas)
ROY: Jahmi’us Ramsey (Texas Tech)
DPOY: Kevin Samuel (TCU)
6TH: Miles McBride (West Virginia)
COY: Scott Drew (Baylor)

Big East
G: Myles Powell (Seton Hall)
G: Markus Howard (Marquette)
F: Paul Reed (DePaul)
F: Naji Marshall (Xavier)
C: Omer Yurtseven (Georgetown)
POY: Markus Howard (Marquette)
ROY: Jeremiah Robinson-Earl (Villanova)
DPOY: Paul Reed (DePaul)
6TH: Jahvon Blair (Georgetown)
COY: Kevin Willard (Seton Hall)

Big Sky
G: Sayeed Pridgett (Montana)
G: Holland Woods (Portland State)
F: Mason Peatling (Eastern Washington)
F: Kim Aiken Jr. (Eastern Washington)
C: Joshua Patton (Sacramento State)
POY: Sayeed Pridgett (Montana)
ROY: Derrick Carter-Hollinger (Montana)
DPOY: Sal Nuhu (Portland State)
6TH: Kai Edwards (Northern Colorado)
COY: Shantay Legans (Eastern Washington)

Big 10
G: Anthony Cowan Jr. (Maryland)
G: Cassius Winston (Michigan State)
F: Luka Garza (Iowa)
F: Jalen Smith (Maryland)
C: Daniel Oturu (Minnesota)
POY: Luka Garza (Iowa)
ROY: Trayce Jackson-Davis (Indiana)
DPOY: Xavier Tillman (Michigan State)
6TH: Devonte Green (Indiana)
COY: Brad Underwood (Illinois)

Big West
G: Jaquori McLaughlin (UCSB)
G: Austen Awosika (Fullerton)
G: Chance Hunter (Long Beach State)
F: Amadou Sow (UCSB)
F: Collin Welp (UC-Irvine)
POY: Amadou Sow (UCSB)
ROY: Ezra Manjon (UC Davis)
DPOY: Joshua Morgan (Long Beach State)
6TH: Collin Welp (UC-Irvine)
COY: Mark Gottfired (Cal State Northridge)

C-USA
G: Taevion Kinsey (Marshall)
G: Jhivvan Jackson (UTSA)
G: Keaton Wallace (UTSA)
F: Carson Williams (Western Kentucky)
F: Bryson Williams (UTEP)
POY: Jhivvan Jackson (UTSA)
ROY: Jahmir Young (Charlotte)
DPOY: Osasumwen Osaghae (Florida International)
6TH: Kalob Ledoux (Louisiana Tech)
COY: Grant McCasland (North Texas)

Ivy
G: Brandon Anderson (Brown)
G: Mike Smith (Columbia)
F: Paul Atkinson (Yale)
F: AJ Brodeur (Penn)
C: Richmond Aririguzoh (Princeton)
POY: Mike Smith (Columbia)
ROY: Jordan Dingle (Penn)
DPOY: AJ Brodeur (Penn)
6TH: Jack Forrest (Columbia)
COY: James Jones (Yale)

MAAC
G: Rich Kelly (Quinnipiac)
G: Jalen Pickett (Siena)
F: Tajuan Agee (Iona)
F: EJ Crawford (Iona)
C: Tyere Marshall (Rider)
POY: EJ Crawford (Iona)
ROY: Aaron Estrada (St. Peter’s)
DPOY: KC Ndefo (St. Peter’s)
6TH: Majesty Brandon (Canisius)
COY: Shaheen Holloway (St. Peter’s)

MAC
G: Marreon Jackson (Toledo)
G: Loren Cristian Jackson (Akron)
F: Ben Vander Plas (Ohio)
F: Tahjai Teague (Ball State)
C: Luke Knapke (Toledo)
POY: Loren Cristian Jackson (Akron)
ROY: Dae Dae Grant (Miami OH)
DPOY: Davonta Jordan (Buffalo)
6TH: Mekhi Lairy (Miami OH)
COY: John Groce (Akron)

MEAC
G: Dejuan Clayton (Coppin State)
G: John Crosby (Delaware State)
G: Stanley Davis (Morgan State)
F: Cletrell Pope (Bethune-Cookman)
F: Jibri Blount (North Carolina Central)
POY: John Crosby (Delaware State)
ROY: Wayne Bristol Jr. (Howard)
DPOY: Jibri Blount (North Carolina Central)
6TH: Malik Maitland (Bethune-Cookman)
COY: Kevin Broadus (Morgan State)

Pac-12
G: Remy Martin (Arizona State)
G: Payton Pritchard (Oregon)
F: Tres Tinkle (Oregon State)
F: Onyeka Okongwu (USC)
C: Isaiah Stewart (Washington)
POY: Payton Pritchard (Oregon)
ROY: Onyeka Okongwu (USC)
DPOY: Onyeka Okongwu (USC)
6TH: Alonzo Verge Jr. (Arizona State)
COY: Andy Enfield (USC)

SEC
G: Mason Jones (Arkansas)
G: Kira Lewis Jr. (Alabama)
F: Reggie Perry (Mississippi State)
F: Keyontae Johnson (Florida)
C: Nick Richards (Kentucky)
POY: Mason Jones (Arkansas)
ROY: Anthony Edwards (Georgia)
DPOY: Adrio Bailey (Arkansas)
6TH: Xavier Pinson (Missouri)
COY: John Calipari (Kentucky)

Southland
G: Kevon Harris (Stephen F. Austin)
G: Ian Dubose (Houston Baptist)
F: Sha’markus Kennedy (McNeese State)
F: TJ Atwood (Lamar)
C: Kai Mitchell (Sam Houston State)
POY: Sha’markus Kennedy (McNeese State)
ROY: Keaston Willis (Incarnate Word)
DPOY: Hayden Koval (Central Arkansas)
6TH: Cameron Johnson (Stephen F. Austin)
COY: Kyle Keller (Stephen F. Austin)

SWAC
G: Gerard Andrus (Prairie View)
G: Tyrik Armstrong (Texas Southern)
G: Maurice Howard (Alcorn State)
F: Devante Jackson (Grambling)
F: Troymain Crosby (Alcorn State)
POY: Tyrik Armstrong (Texas Southern)
ROY: Caleb Hunter (Mississippi Valley State)
DPOY: Jayveous McKinnis (Jackson State)
6TH: Damiree Burns (Southern)
COY: Sean Woods (Southern)

WAC
G: Milan Acquaah (California Baptist)
G: Terrell Brown (Seattle)
F: De’Jon Davis (California Baptist)
F: Lesley Varner II (Texas-Rio Grande Valley)
C: Alessandro Lever (Grand Canyon)
POY: Terrell Brown (Seattle)
ROY: Jovan Blacksher Jr. (Grand Canyon)
DPOY: Emmanuel Olojakpoke (Utah Valley)
6TH: Lorenzo Jenkins (Grand Canyon)
COY: Chris Jans (New Mexico State)

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Bracketology 2020: March Madness Predictions (Version 10.2)

Welcome to the greatest month of the year! We are only 5 days away from Selection Sunday as we continue to make our NCAA tourney predictions. Last March HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel correctly picked 67 of the 68 teams that made the tourney, 63 of which were within 1 spot of their actual seed, including 45 right on the money. He will spend the upcoming days predicting which 68 teams will hear their names called on March 15th. See below for his list of who would make the cut if they picked the field today and if you agree or disagree then feel free to tweet us. To see how we stack up with other websites (ranked 7th out of 133 entries over the past 5 years), check out: www.bracketmatrix.com

SEED: TEAM (CONFERENCE)
1: Kansas (Big 12)
1: Baylor (Big 12)
1: Gonzaga (WCC)
1: Dayton (A-10)

2: San Diego State (MWC)
2: Florida State (ACC)
2: Villanova (Big East)
2: Creighton (Big East)

3: Duke (ACC)
3: Michigan State (Big 10)
3: Seton Hall (Big East)
3: Maryland (Big 10)

4: Kentucky (SEC)
4: Oregon (Pac-12)
4: Louisville (ACC)
4: Wisconsin (Big 10)

5: Ohio State (Big 10)
5: Butler (Big East)
5: Auburn (SEC)
5: BYU (WCC)

6: West Virginia (Big 12)
6: Iowa (Big 10)
6: Michigan (Big 10)
6: Penn State (Big 10)

7: Virginia (ACC)
7: Colorado (Pac-12)
7: Illinois (Big 10)
7: Houston (AAC)

8: Arizona (Pac-12)
8: LSU (SEC)
8: St. Mary’s (WCC)
8: Providence (Big East)

9: Marquette (Big East)
9: Florida (SEC)
9: USC (Pac-12)
9: Rutgers (Big 10)

10: Oklahoma (Big 12)
10: Arizona State (Pac-12)
10: Indiana (Big 10)
10: Texas Tech (Big 12)

11: Utah State (MWC): AUTO-BID
11: Wichita State (AAC)
11: Xavier (Big East)
11: Stanford (Pac-12)
11: Richmond (A-10)
11: Cincinnati (AAC)

12: East Tennessee State (SoCon): AUTO-BID
12: Yale (Ivy)
12: Liberty (Atlantic Sun): AUTO-BID
12: Stephen F. Austin (Southland)

13: Vermont (America East)
13: Akron (MAC)
13: North Texas (C-USA)
13: New Mexico State (WAC)

14: Belmont (OVC): AUTO-BID
14: Bradley (MVC): AUTO-BID
14: Colgate (Patriot)
14: Hofstra (CAA)

15: UC Irvine (Big West)
15: Eastern Washington (Big Sky)
15: North Dakota State (Summit)
15: Little Rock (Sun Belt)

16: Northern Kentucky (Horizon)
16: Winthrop (Big South): AUTO-BID
16: St. Francis PA (NEC)
16: Prairie View (SWAC)
16: Siena (MAAC)
16: North Carolina Central (MEAC)

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Championship Week Video Notebook: Day 7

Welcome Selection Committee Members!!  It is just a few more days until your first meeting, and we are here to help guide you in any way that we can!

CLICK HERE for the Hoops HD SURVIVAL BOARD, which lays out which teams are locks, which are under consideration, and which need the automatic bids

CLICK HERE for the latest Hoops HD BRACKET RUNDOWN

CLICK HERE for our BRACKETOLOGY PAGE

CLICK HERE for our Conference Tournament Brackets and Info

For those that prefer audio only:

Below is all of today’s Conference Tournament Action

WEST COAST CHAMPIONSHIP

COLONIAL CHAMPIONSHIP

HORIZON LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP

SUMMIT LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP

NORTHEAST CONFERENCE CHAMPIONSHIP

AMERICA EAST SEMIFINALS

SWAC QUARTERFINALS

ACC OPENING ROUND

METRO ATLANTIC OPENING ROUND

MEAC OPENING ROUND

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